Tara Wall of the Republican National Committee feels that diversity of ideas is just as important as racial differences. She responds to the recent uproar over Ebony magazine and one editor's Twitter comments.

Jeffrey Toobin says the Supreme Court got rid of limits on the total amount you can give political campaigns in an election season, but kept the limit on what you can give to one candidate. What's next?

A great-grandson of the chemical magnate Irenee du Pont, Robert H. Richards IV was convicted of raping his daughter but avoided prison in 2009 because he would "not fare well" behind bars, documents reveal

It was no April Fool's prank. Wearing a T-shirt declaring, "Luck of the Jedi I Have," a California man showed up at state lottery headquarters with a Powerball ticket he'd been holding on to since February.

Chances are you've heard of the honey badger; you know that it "don't give a sh**" about the bees that are stinging its face, and you know it "don't care" about that cobra that's poised for attack. And if you know all of that, it's probably because you're one of 66.4 million people who have watched the 2011 viral video called "The Crazy Nastyass Honey Badger," by a sassy nature lover.

A great-grandson of the chemical magnate Irenee du Pont, Robert H. Richards IV was convicted of raping his daughter but avoided prison in 2009 because he would "not fare well" behind bars, documents reveal

The calendar said March, but Monday clearly was Valentine's day -- James Valentine, to be specific -- when the 21-year-old Pennsylvania man survived a work accident that sent the razor-sharp teeth of a chainsaw blade deep into his neck and shoulder, and barely a centimeter from a vital artery.

It was no April Fool's prank. Wearing a T-shirt declaring, "Luck of the Jedi I Have," a California man showed up at state lottery headquarters with a Powerball ticket he'd been holding on to since February.

The calendar said March, but Monday clearly was Valentine's day -- James Valentine, to be specific -- when the 21-year-old Pennsylvania man survived a work accident that sent the razor-sharp teeth of a chainsaw blade deep into his neck and shoulder, and barely a centimeter from a vital artery.